AUSTRALIAN FUNGI. 
213 
in. diara.), orange. On bursting through the volva a portion 
is carried up, like a calyptra, on the top of the pileus. 
Amongst grass. Queensland. 
1183 . Ithyphallus aurantiacus. M. Sacc. Syll. vn., 22.= 
Phallus aurantiacus., Mont. Ann. Sci. Nat. 1841, 277, t. 16,/. 1. 
Stem 6-8 in. long, $ in. thick, a little attenuated upwards, 
orange, rounded at the apex, at first closed, then pervious ; pileus 
Without collar or ring, joined to the apex of the stem, and pressed 
to it, thimble-shaped, orange, about an inch high, delicately reti- 
culately rugose. 
On the ground. Queensland. 
1184 . Ithyphallus novae hollandise. Ca. Sacc. Syll. v ii., 23. 
=Phallus novaj-hollandiaj., Corda Ic. Fang, vi., 19, t. hi., 
/. 46. Cytiophallus cayleyi.. Berk, in Grev. xi,, 57. 
Stem white, slender, attenuated upwards ; pileus narrowly cam- 
panulate, almost cylindrical, scarcely broader than the stem, ex- 
ternally reticulate (?) ; spores 3 X fi- 
Ow the ground. N.S. Wales. Queensland. (Fig. 98). 
b. Rugui.osi. Pileus externally tuberculosely rugulose. 
1185 . Ithyphallus retusus. Kalch. Sacc. Syll. vn., 27.= 
Phallus retusus., Kalch. Gastro. p. 6, t. 2, f. 1. Omphalo- 
phallus Mullerianus., Kalch. Flora 1883, p. 95. 
About 6 in. high ; stem an inch or more thick, cylindrical, not 
attenuated at the apex ; pileus ovate, closed at the apex, retuse 
above the apex of the stem, externally white, slightly rugose, 
internally grey. 
On the ground. N.S. Wales. 
1186 . Ithyphallus rubicundus. Bose. Sacc. Syll. vir., 29. 
—Phallus rubicundus. Bose. Fr. Syst. Myc. 11., 284. 
Stem 16-17 c.m. high, fusiform, 1^-2 c.m. thick in the middle, 
r ed ; pileus conical- cauipanulate, 3 c.m. high, even (?), clad with a 
fuscous gluten, joined to the apex of the stem by a collar, pervious. 
On the ground. Victoria. 
Fhallus vitellinus. Muell. 
No description known. 
Victoria. 
Genus 3. MUTINUS. Fries Veg. Scan. 11., 434.=Cyno- 
phallus., Fr. Si/s. Myc. 11., 1822. 
Receptacle stipitil'orm, without distinct pileus, covered in the 
upper part with the sporiferous pulp, the lower part naked. The 
sporiferous portion equal to, or rather broader, than the stem. 
1187 . Mutinus? Watsoni. Berk. Linn. Journ. xvm., p. 387. 
Sacc. Syll. vi., 737. 
About 2-^ in. high. Spore-bearing portion conical, one- 
fourth the length of the entire receptacle, minutely veined, red, 
about i in. diam. at the base, pervious at the apex. 
On the ground. Burnett’s River. 
